Manila Standard

IPhone sales help Apple beat forecasts

- India is ‘major focus’

SAN FRANCISCO, USA—Apple on Thursday said iPhone sales and money made from services powered quarterly earnings that beat forecasts, despite inflation pressure and the slowing global economy.

The iPhone maker’s bottom line capped a successful earnings season for US tech giants, with Meta, Google and Amazon also beating expectatio­ns after suffering a painful spell of lower sales and profits.

The smartphone titan reported profit of $24 billion on revenue of $94.8 billion in the first three months of this year.

The overall revenues for the period were lower than a year before, though this was expected and Apple’s shares were up about one percent in after-market trading.

“We are pleased to report an alltime record in services and a March quarter record for iPhone despite the challengin­g macroecono­mic environmen­t,” Apple chief executive Tim Cook said in an earnings release.

Sales of iPhones were up two percent and tallied $51.3 billion in the quarter, according to earnings figures.

“The iPhone base has well over a billion active devices... We feel great about the size of it and the rate that it’s growing,” Cook told analysts after the earning result.

Analysts said this was at least in part due to the reopening of China after a long period of Covid-19 restrictio­ns that hurt economic growth.

Though Apple has made noise with its expansion into India, China remains the iPhone maker’s crucial supplier and a key market.

Apple was deeply affected by the years of Chinese Covid-related closures and is only now seeing its complex supply chain returning to normal.

The company founded by Steve Jobs is making a very publicized push into India, with Cook himself attending the country’s first Apple Store openings last month.

“India is an incredibly exciting market. It’s a major focus for us. I was just there, and the dynamism in the market, the vibrancy, is unbelievab­le,” Cook said.

The country is home to the secondhigh­est number of smartphone users in the world and efforts there help to deflect attention from the company’s dependence on China.

Sales of Macs slipped to about $7.2 billion as belt-tightening around the world hit the entire personal computer market.

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